site.btaConstitutional Court Finds Machine Voting Consistent with Constitution
July 2 (BTA) - Bulgaria's Constitutional Court on Friday issued a  decision determining that all-machine voting is not unconstitutional.  The decision has been posted on the Court's website. The case was  instituted on May 7, 2021 on a petition by 66 MPs of GERB in the 45th  National Assembly.
 
 The GERB petition challenged provisions of an Act to Amend and  Supplement the Election Code. Passed conclusively on April 29 and  entered into force on May 1, the revisions in question scrapped voting  by paper ballot and replaced it by machine voting only with minor  exceptions, required the replacement of the incumbent Central Election  Commission (CEC), and limited the application of the proportional  representation system until the next regular parliamentary elections.
 
 The Court ruled that the machine voting ballot essentially only displays  the paper ballot content on an electronic medium and that the principle  of equal franchise is not breached because a vote cast by machine  carries the same weight as a vote cast by paper ballot.
 
 The Constitutional Court rejected the claimed unconstitutionality of the  provision on voting by paper ballot in sections with fewer than 300  voters and of another amendment, under which the President of the  Republic had 14 days from the entry into force of the Act to appoint new  CEC members, whereupon the credentials of the sitting members were to  be terminated.
 
 The Court found that voting by paper ballot in under-300 voter sections  is completely admissible when based on objective and legally established  criteria, and that this method is similarly provided for mobile  sections, at hospitals, nursing homes and other specialized care homes,  and on board ships flying the Bulgarian flag.
 
 The Court, however, decided that limiting the applicability of the  proportional representation system until the conduct of the first  regular parliamentary elections after the entry into force of the  amendments at issue is unconstitutional. "The provision is addressed to a  next National Assembly, prescribing to it to adopt, within an  indefinite timeframe, new rules on the conduct of parliamentary  elections according to an unspecified election system other than  proportional representation. The provision is unclear, contradictory and  impracticable and, therefore, it runs counter to the principle of the  rule of law proclaimed in Article 4 (1) of the Constitution. It targets  the abolition of the existing proportional representation system without  specifying a system that should be implemented so that the conduct of  parliamentary elections could be at all possible," the Decision reads.
 
 The Decision was not adopted unanimously by the 12-member Constitutional  Court. Five judges (Anastas Anastasov, Grozdan Iliev, Mariana  Karagyozova, Tanya Raykovska and Filip Dimitrov) expressed dissenting  opinions about the constitutionality of machine voting only and about  voting by paper ballot as an exception. Three judges (Pavlina Panova,  Krassimir Vlahov and Anastas Anastasaov) disagreed with the  unavailability of machine voting in sections with fewer than 300 voters.  RY/LG
 
 
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